the value is based on the shape it is in for great shape it would fetch 500 to 800 at auction
A powder horn.
metal
black powder, bullet patch, projectile.
A musket is apt to misfire if your powder is wet.
No, a rifle has rifling in its barrel (spiral grooves to make the bullet spin, thus stabilizing it and improving accuracy). A musket barrel is smooth.
it had good range and was effective against troops
According to a website specialising in English Civil War equipment: Gunpowder was carried in bandoleers.
Nominally, whatever size the bore of the musket is, although musket balls were usually considerably smaller than the bore in order to reduce powder fouling in the bore. The British Brown Bess was .75 calibre (but fired a .71 calibre musket ball), the French Charleville musket was .69 calibre (these were also commonly used by what would become the United States during the American Revolution), the smoothbore Springfield Muskets were .69 calibre, while the rifled muskets were .58 calibre... just to put a few out there.
The press powder and the powder bronzer and blush.usually it is marked on the label as to which skin type it is catering to.
The 209 throws a much stronger spark into the powder charge than a no.11 or musket cap.
There were matchlocks before flintlocks. They used a slow burning string, something like a fuse. The "hammer" held this in a clamp and when the trigger was pulled the lit "match" touched the priming powder in the pan (with any luck) firing the gun.
Early black powder large caliber smooth bore musket. IIRC, muzzle is slightly funnel shaped to assist loading.